this is portable

The things you pass by every day

Over the last couple of years, I noticed that I pass a lot of hand painted signs on my ride to work. I always tell myself that I’ll go take pictures of them one day, but of course, I never did. Until today that is.

On my way back from the office this morning I stopped to take pictures of a couple of my favourite signs that I pass the most. Turns out they’re kind of hard to take pictures of from the street and there always seemed to be something in the way.

Geo L Wilson Sign on the North Side
This one is my favourite sign I’ve seen so far on the North Side and it also appears to be one of the more recently done signs. This one isn’t on my regular commute route, but still, I pass it quite a bit. I love the way the x-height, scale, and kerning just go haywire in the “Specialty Products” line and how different the two lowercase “t”s are. Adorable imperfection.

Robinson...Agents Sign on the North side
There isn’t much of this one left, but I love the calligraphic style italics of the word “Agents”. The “A” pretty much makes it for me. And what’s with that window totally killing the “t” and the “n”?

Spearhead Cabinets sign in the Strip District
This one I actually do see everyday. It’s right outside the office door. I think the “A”s are the best part of this one. All caps sans serif seem to be pretty popular for this kind of sign painting, but I haven’t seen such low-waisted “A”s much. Except in this one, of course. (Watch, now that I’ve said that, I’ll see them everywhere…)

Oh, and if you’re wondering about AE Jones Co listed on the GEO Wilson sign, they appear to be located here.

IE6 users don’t want to be “warned”, “notified”, or anything else.

IE6 may have just cost you hours of your life that you’ll never get back, but that doesn’t mean that all IE6 users are clueless slobs that go around kicking puppies. Not at all. They are real people, even smart people.

A lot of the suggestions I’ve read for getting rid of IE6 will probably do more to degrade user experience than to stop the use of IE6. They seem to assume that all IE6 users are just a bit clueless and haven’t figured out IE6 is old yet. Posting warning messages, reminders to upgrade, or excessively stripping out styles just sound like ways to take our frustrations out on these users. If you start thinking of IE6 users as people instead of the embodiment of this evil browser, all those “solutions” don’t make a lot of sense anymore.

Don’t believe me? I give you three people*, I may even know in real life, who use IE6 and who don’t want to be warned or notified or anything else. To make things even worse, they will probably continue to use IE6 for a long time to come, at least in internet years. (*Names have been changed to protect the innocent, of course.)

Bob, aka “Stuck with it”

Bob works for a mammoth corporation. Actually, it could even be a big corporation, it doesn’t matter. What does matter is that the IT department of said corporation has decided the browser of choice for the entire staff is IE6.

Bob might be hip enough to know that IE6 sucks, but it doesn’t matter. He doesn’t have admin privileges, he can’t install apps, he’s at the mercy of the IT department. Your messages telling him he should upgrade just rubs salt in his wounds and probably even make him a little mad.

Julie, aka “Has a good reason for still using it”

Julie is a PHD student. She conducts research studies of specialized things and collects data. She also needs to analyze that data. Unfortunately, the software she needs to use to do that is only compatible with IE6. True, she could have a second browser installed for non-research use, but chances are she’s too busy to go through all that trouble.

Warning messages telling her to upgrade are either annoying or just go ignored. She’s not going to upgrade until she gets through her dissertation no matter what you say.

Hazel, aka “Totally technology-phobic”

Hazel has an old computer. Maybe she got it years ago, or maybe she bought an old used one. Either way, to her it gets the job done and she doesn’t need anything else. She mostly uses it to email her friends. She is not “computer savvy” by any stretch. In fact, the idea of downloading or installing software scares her. The only way an upgrade is going to happen is if someone else does it for her.

Warning messages will confuse her at best. They’ll probably just make her think she’s done something wrong. Either way, she’s not going to take any action.

So…

This isn’t to say that we should do nothing at all about IE6. I do think it’s time to start phasing out full IE6 support when it makes sense for a particular project. And I have no problem with sites looking different in IE6.

But our collective time would be better spent taking the time to understand our audience and building what makes sense for them. Taking the time to quietly give IE6 what it needs to let the site do what it should is a much better plan for all involved.